![]() ![]() “We believed that we’d made the case they had kept blacks out … given the facts of the situations, it didn’t seem to use to be radical at all.” “We regarded the regular delegates as totally illegitimate,” she remembered. Holmes lobbied hard for the MFDP at the national convention and was disappointed when the credentials committee only offered the MFDP two at-large seats. Holmes, Joseph Rauh, and Miles Jaffe meticulously crafted a legal brief that outlined the discriminatory practices of the Mississippi Democrats, who blocked Black political participation at every turn. The MFDP sought to challenge the racist lily-white Mississippi Democratic Party at the Democratic National Convention (DNC) that August. In the summer of 1964, Holmes volunteered as part of the legal counsel for the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party (MFDP). She started the New Haven CORE chapter and organized picket lines in support of the sit-in demonstrations sweeping the South. All the while, she remained involved in local civil rights activities. “I went to law school to be a civil rights lawyer,” she explained. She embraced her outsider status and consistently stood against the grain of white and male dominated law profession. During her sophomore year, Holmes decided to become a lawyer, largely inspired by “the ripening of my civil rights consciousness,” and in 1960 she was accepted into Yale Law School.Īt the time, Holmes was one of only two Black women who had been admitted to Yale Law School (the other was Marian Wright). Antioch pushed Holmes “toward my more radical self, the part that was already very skeptical about middle class values.” She headed up the college’s NAACP chapter and engaged in local civil rights demonstrations. After graduating from Dunbar High School in 1955, she attended Antioch College in Ohio. “My parents were always politically conscious and we had a very intellectually alive household,” she recalled. Reflecting on her efforts, SNCC’s Dorie Ladner noted, “When people like Eleanor and others came, thank God, they helped open this beast up.”Įleanor Holmes’s Alabama State Police file,, Alabama Photographs and Pictures Collection, ADAHĮleanor Holmes was born and raised in Washington D.C. Finally, after two days, SCLC’s Andrew Young secured their release. She traveled to Winona herself the next morning to make sure that they were alive. Holmes, using her status as law student at Yale University, demanded that police chief in Greenwood call and ask about the prisoners in Winona. SNCC’s Lawrence Guyot drove over to post bail and was also beaten and thrown in jail. Fannie Lou Hamer, were imprisoned and viciously beaten in Winona, a small town thirty miles east of Greenwood. Around the same time, several COFO workers, including Mrs. Holmes didn’t have long to reflect on Evers’s assassination. ![]() ![]() native: “ was a culture capable of killing black people.” His murder drove home realities of Mississippi for the Washington D.C. The next morning, Holmes learned that Evers had been shot in the back that night in his own driveway. Later Evers dropped Holmes off at the bus station and wished her luck as she headed to Greenwood to visit COFO’s voter registration project in that small Delta city. Almost immediately, she remembered, “talking about the raw atmosphere of Mississippi” with Medgar and his wife Myrlie. She was still in law school at Yale University. Medgar Evers met Eleanor Holmes at the airport when she arrived in Jackson, Mississippi, on June 12, 1963. ![]()
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